January 28, 2012
		Newt Self-Deports in Florida
Live by the sword, die by the sword.  Newt surged from the back of  the pack after his performance in the early debates.  Then came his  famous take-down of CNN reporter John King on the eve of the South  Carolina primary, to a standing ovation.  Republicans recognize that the  GOP candidate will be running against the media.  Obama will remain  above the fray.  They want someone who will not only parry the thrusts  of the MSM, but thrust back-with eloquence, wit, and  indignation-something Milquetoast Mitt didn't seem capable of.  
By Tuesday, Jan. 24, Newt had taken a commanding lead over Mitt in Florida polls, 37.7  to 30.3.  Then came Newt's interview with the Hispanic station  Univision, where he ridiculed the idea of "self-deportation,"  his ad in  Spanish labeling Romney as "anti-immigrant," and Thursday's debate in  Jacksonville.  Newt dragged out the law-abiding, church-going grandma  one time too many.  Romney was finally provoked to say something that  clearly resonated with Florida Republicans: "You know, our problem is  not 11 million grandmothers. Our problem is ... [applause]  Our problem  is 11 million people getting jobs that many Americans, legal immigrants,  would like to have. It's school kids in schools that districts are  having a hard time paying for. It's people getting free health care  because we are required under the law to provide that health care."
Pollsters  seem consistently to underrate the importance of illegal immigration  for voters.  Some respondents don't want to cite it as a key issue for  fear of sounding "anti-immigrant" or "racist." Tom Tancredo, running  primarily on that issue, bombed in 2008.  But that may have had to do  more with Tancredo's lack of gravitas and debating skills.   Since the  exchange over illegal immigration, Mitt is back up in the most recent  Florida poll,  39.2 to 31.  
Illegal  immigratione may be even more important to a lot of conservative voters  the issues Mitt has flipped on, gays, guns, and abortion.  If he could  bring himself to express some reservations about affirmative action, his  lead might double.  Again, pollsters don't catch the resentment of  non-minority voters at three decades of  double standards.
But  Mitt still has a chance to blow it.  His most recent robocalls in the  Tampa Bay area feature Tom Brokaw announcing the ethics verdict against  Newt.  Brokaw is reverently introduced.  Romney's organization, or one  of his PACs, seems to have forgotten why he lost in South Carolina on  Saturday and why he's now surging in Florida.




